The reason for its creation was an event
that caused a lot of fuss on the Russian blogosphere two years ago.

The 21-year-old twins Ksenia and Evgenia
Karatigina, while participating on the trivia show “Crazy Beautiful” (MusTV,
December 2011), when asked the question "What is the Holocaust?"
replied: "Isn't it glue for wallpaper?"

The clip immediately appeared online,
gaining a huge number of views and thousands of comments that mainly discussed
and made fun of the girls’ lack of education. The sisters got their minute of
fame, becoming more popular than they were counting on by participating on the
TV show.

It was then that the journalist of
Svoboda (“Freedom”) radio, Mumin Shakirov, had an idea to take the sisters to
the memorial museum located on the grounds of the Auschwitz death camp in
Poland.

Shakirov told journalists that
he did not know how the young women would react, and he did not plan anything
in advance.

“I was ready for any reaction. It was
possible they wouldn't react at all — that they would just have a look and then
go off shopping. If the girls had had a different reaction, well, it would have
been a completely different story,” said Shakirov.

After the visit, one of the girls
genuinely cried for a long time. As one of the journalists aptly put it, after
visiting Auschwitz, “the girls became older by 70 years.”

The overly positive ending disappointed
older viewers, who expected a more critical tone to be taken toward the younger
generation.

Shakirov, however, had not planned to make a publicity movie;
instead he took a detached and neutral position, trying not to pass judgment on
the younger generation and being more interested in finding the causes for the
depressing lack of knowledge.

As the director said, it was not easy to
convince the young women to go on the trip and to take part in the filming:
“More than anything, they were afraid that they would be portrayed as being
stupid.” They agreed mainly because it was an opportunity for them to go
overseas for the first time.

Shakirov traveled to the girls’ home—the
village Krasnaya Gorbatka in Vladimir Oblast—and spoke to their mother and
their history teacher at school (the girls are both currently studying in Moscow
at the University of Design).

The girls are not what people tend to call
disadvantaged children: They are quite well-socialized, mobile and active, and they
speak proper Russian. This makes it all the more incredible that they had never
heard of the Holocaust.

And they are not alone, which is clearly
shown in the documentary. Their history teacher admits feeling responsible for
not telling her students about the Holocaust. She says that she does not feel
ready to breach this topic; she will talk about it when she “finds the right
approach.”

The girls’ mother, even though she is
critical of her daughters, presents this argument to justify what happened: “I
asked all my neighbors, friends and colleagues—none of them could tell me what
the Holocaust was.”

Related:

The girls’ story in this film becomes a
portrait of their generation, which has no idea about the crimes committed by
the Nazis. We are faced with a phenomenon that is much more complex than
“Holocaust denial”: an absence of knowledge about it.

Shakirov does admit that this problem is
present not only in Russia. In Europe, the United States and even Israel, many
members of the younger generation prefer not to learn about this topic.

Only one movie theatre in Russia is
currently planning to screen the movie, with 10 sessions at the Documentary
Film Center in Moscow. Shakirov plans to independently promote his film on the
Internet.

The movie, which might count on
government support, has no chance for huge commercial success. Meanwhile, it
could be a great tool for Russian teachers who still cannot find the right
words 70 years after the end of the war.